4. congenital heart disease january2011 final

Post on 25-Jan-2015

149 views 5 download

description

CHD

Transcript of 4. congenital heart disease january2011 final

CONGENITAL HEART DISEASES

ETSEGEGENET GEDLUDepartment of Pediatrics

and Child Heath AAU , Collage of Heath sciences January 2011

Objective To revise the fetal circulation

To discuss about the Classification of congenital heart disease

Discuses the common acyanotic and cyanotic congenital heart diseases epidemiology, pathophysiology ,clinical presentation, Investigation and principles of management. of common congenital Heart disease

Cont ..At the end of the lecture a student should be able to

discus • classification of CHD• The epidemiology• pathophysiology• clinical presentation and physical findings of

common CHD• The principles of management including relevant

investigations for respective lesions .

Fetal circulationThe right and left ventricles exist in a parallel circuit.In the fetus gas and metabolite exchange are provided by the placentaParallel circuit maintained

Foramen ovale Ductus arteriosus Ductus venosus

Foetal Circulation Arterial blood leaves the

placenta via the umbilical vein This branches and delivers

blood to the IVC by way of the ductus venosus

Blood then goes into the right atrium, 30% goes across the foramen ovale, the rest to the RV then to PA

Instead of going to the lungs, 85% goes through the PDA to the aorta

Transitional circulationInterruption of Umbilical cord Removal of the low resistance placental circulation result in an

Increased systemic vascular resistance lack of blood flow through the placenta leads to closure of

Ductus venosus (the ligamentum venosum) Expansion of lungs : Mechanical expansion of the lungs and increased arterial P02

result in a rapid decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance. The increased blood volume from the pulmonary circulation

increased the LA volume and pressure sufficiently to close the foramen ovale (fossa ovalis)

PDA closure : The ductus flow become left to right and later the ductus will obliterated.(ligamentum arteriosus)

Transitional circulationThe right ventricle is coupled with low resistance pulmonary circulation and its wall thickness and mass decreased

The left ventricle coupled to high resistance systemic circulation and its wall thickness and mass increased and deliver the entire systemic cardiac out put. There is a change from fetal haemoglobin to adult haemoglobin

Congenital Heart diseaseIntroduction:Def: Structural or functional heart disease that

present at birth. It is not static ,there is always a continuous

anatomical or physiological change

• The incidence is higher in abortus and still births • Estimate in live birth range from 4-10.2 per 1000live

birth.

Cont….

• The incidence of specific type of CHD varies from one country to another

• Specific aetiology only known 10% 8% genetic 2% environmental (rubella, foetal-alcohol

syndrome

• 90% Multifactorial inheritance

Prevalence of Congenital heart Disease (chart review)

DevelopedDeveloped

countriescountries

Ethio-Swedish Ethio-Swedish 19861986

TAHTAH

2003-082003-08

VSDVSD 28.3%28.3% 4141 28.4%28.4%

PDAPDA 12%12% 13%13% 16.5%16.5%

ASDASD 10.7%10.7% 13.6%13.6% 13%13%

COACOA 8.8%8.8% <2%<2% 1.8%1.8%

TOFTOF 7%7% 9%9% 5.7%5.7%

PSPS 6%6% 9.9%9.9% 8.8%8.8%

ASAS 2.3%2.3% 3.5%3.5% 3.4%3.4%

cont.….

• The risk of recurrence in siblings varies from 1-4%• Third Pregnancy 20-30% • Parents with CHD 4-6%• Varies with type of inheritance• Except PDA and ASD males are more affected than

females.

Congenital Heart Disease Types

I. Lesions with Increased Pulmonary Blood Flow Heart failure or Pulmonary vascular resistance

II. Lesions with Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow

III. Lesions with Inadequate Systemic Flow

Common Congenital Heart Diseases

Acynotic Shunts ( L to R) :• ASD• VSD• PDA• AVSDStenosis:• AS• PS• Coarctation

• cyanosis• TOF• TGA• Tricuspid atresia• Truncus• TAPVR• Ebstein’s• Single ventricle eg.

HLHS[hypoplastic left heart synd]

Clinical manifestation of CHDCHD suspected in any child with:• Feeding difficulty• Recurrent attack of respiratory tract

infection• Growth failure• Cyanosis unresponsive to 100% oxygen• Tachycardia• Respiratory distress• Rhythm disturbance• Murmur ( absence of murmur doesn't rule out or in CHD)

Management of CHDGeneral principle • 1) Treatment of Congestive Heart Failure

Diuretics [lasix, spironolactone]Inotropic support [dopamine]After load reduction [vasodilators]

2) Correction of underlying defect (timing depend on the type and severity

• 3)Prevention and treatment of complicationPulmonary HPT : early surgical correctionInfective endocarditis: Administration of antibiotic

chemoprophylaxis as indicated.Non infective thromboembolism : prevent polycythemia :partial exchange transfusionCounselling of parents on the risk of recurrence

Ventricular Septal Defect

• Most common CHD• Both sexes are equally affected• Incidence of 1/3000 • Can be single or multiple• Can be associated with other

congenital heart diseases

VSD cont.…Types of VSD:• 70% membranous close to pulmonary

valve and Pulmonary artery• 20% muscular• 5% Aortic valve (sub aortic)• 5% near junction of Mitral and tricuspid

valve (A-V canal defect)

Clinical manifestations

I) Asymptomatic:• Small VSD , trivial shunt ,the pulmonary

pressure is normal• Loud harsh Holosystolic murmur at LLSB, with

thrill• X-ray is normal• EKG normal

VSD CONT….II ) Large defects:• Excessive pulmonary blood flow lead to

pulmonary hypertension• Dyspnea, feeding difficulty• Poor growth• Profuse perspiration• Recurrent pulmonary infection

Physical Examination:• Prominence of the precordium• Palpable parasternal lift• Apical trust with systolic thrill• Holosystolic murmur at LLSB less harsh and

more blowing• Diastolic murmur at the apex • Increased P2 indicate pulmonary HPT.

VSD cont….

Severity depend on :• The size of the defect• Level of pulmonary resistance to systemic resistance.• Defects < 0.5 restrictive > 1cm sq non restrictive

• Majority closes spontaneously• Large defects lead to CHF at early age

Chest X-Ray (VSD)

• Cardiomegally (LA, LV,RV,PA)

• Increased vascular marking

Diagnostics cont…

ECG: • P wave peaked

and notched• Left ventricular

hypertrophy (biventricular)

Echocardiography (VSD)• Position and size of

VSD• Chamber size• Pressure gradient

across the defect• Direction of shunt

CLINICAL COURSE:Small sized defects• are closed spontaneously in the first year of life• The risk of endocarditis is independent of the size

Moderate to large defects:• decreased in size but not closed• Heart failure and growth failure is common at the early age • Risk of pulmonary hypertension lead to pulmonary vascular

diseases.• Eisenmengers syndrome due to reversal of shunt which

presented with absence of thrill and cyanosis, decreased heart size.

TreatmentSmall size • Reassurance • No surgical treatment• Maintain integrity of primary and permanent teeth• Give anti- infective endocarditis prophylaxis

Antibiotic prophylaxis before dental visit Tonsillectomy instrumentation of GUT,GIT

Treatment cont….Large VSD:• Control CHF• Prevent development of Pulmonary vascular disease. Surgical closure in the first year of life (6M-12M).Device closure of the VSD with Amplatzer device

Umbrella) Palliative : pulmonary banding if surgery is not

possible for the time being

Patent Ductus Arteriosus(PDA)• During foetal life blood from PA

shunted through the DA in to the Aorta.

• After birth closed functionally• Prematurity and hypoxia

predispose for patencey• Female are more affected than

males Commonly associated with rubella of the mother

• Isolated PDAs are common in high altitude

Pathophysiology

Blood flow from the aorta to the pulmonary. Extent of the shunt depend on: • size of the ductus • ratio of pulmonary and systemic

vascular resistance

Clinical manifestation

Depend on the :• Size of the defect and direction of flow• Small defects no symptom• Large defect result in Large left to right shunt

CHFGrowth FailureRepeated ARIReversal of shunt ,(Eisenmengers ) result in dyspnoea and

cyanosis

Physical EXAMINATION• Bounding pulse• Wide pulse pressure• Heave , thrill in the 2nd ics• Continuous machinery murmur 2nd ics • EKG: bi-ventricular hyperthrophy• X-ray: prominent PA, increases PA marking enlarged

chambers(LA,LV),• ECHO: size of the PDA, direction of flow, chamber size• Catheterization: a step up oxygen saturation, PDA

anatomy in angiography

Clinical course:

• Small defects : few or no cardiac symptoms• Large defects:

CHF Infective endocarditis Systemic emboli Calcification of the ductus Non infective thrombosis with embolization Paradoxical emboli Eisenmenger syndrome if left untreated

Treatment

Medical therapy:• Congestive heart failure treatment• infective endocarditis prophylaxis• Surgical closure of the PDA (banding)• Closure of the PDA coil embolization or device

closure without thoracotomy

Coarctation of the Aorta• Occurs at any point from

transverse arch to iliac bifurcation

• 98% below the origin of left sub clavian at the origin of Ductus

• Male to female ratio: 2:1Associated with:• Turner syndrome • Bi cuspid aortic valve (70%)• Left sided obstructive lesions ( Shone

complex)• Mitral valve abnormality • Sub aortic stenosis

Pathophysiology• Collaterals develop to bypass the obstruction.• Hypertension of the aortic branch proximal to

coarctation• In Pre ductal type the RV blood ejected

through the ductus to supply the descending aorta lead to differential cyanosis.

Clinical Manifestations• Severe critical stenosis, the neonate present

with evidence of CHF if not corrected surgically result in death.

• Past the neonatal period Usually asymptomatic

• Older children:HeadachesEpistaxisClaudication, cold feet

Physical Examination:• Weak or absent femoral pulses• Increased B/P in the upper extremities• B/P difference between upper and lower

extremities• Radio Femoral pulse delay ( Collaterals)• A2 is loud , systolic murmur 3rd and 4th

ULSB

Cont….

Chest x_ray:• Dilated descending

Aorta, enlarged LV.• Rib notchingECG: normal in childhood,

later LV hypertrophy.

ECHO

• Measure the stenotic area• gradient

Treatment

• Neonatal: closure of the ductus lead to hypo perfussion and acidosis, thus give infusion of prostaglandin to reopen the ductus, after stabilization surgical treatment.

• Older children with CHF and no hypertension medical treatment followed by surgery or angioplasty.

• Re -stenosis balloon angioplasty is safe.

Tetralogy of Fallot

• Common cyanotic congenital cardiac anomaly

• Four anatomical components of TOF:– VSD– Overriding Aorta– Right ventricular outflow

obstruction– Right ventricular hypertrophy

Pathophysiology:

• Severity directly proportional to the degree of RVOT obstruction.

• Change in pulmonary and systemic vascular resistance and the degree of RVOT obstruction affect degree of R-L shunt.

• Infundibular stenosis is progressive.

Clinical ManifestationsVariable depend on RVOT obstruction pink to cyanosis

CHF is not a usual manifestation of TOF

Squatting

Dyspnoea on exertion

Hypoxic spells

Growth failure

Physical Examination:Cyanosis variableClubbingUsually S2 is single,Quite precordiumThrill at the pulmonary area(-+)Systolic ejection murmur at the pulmonary area(LUSB)

Clinical pictures cont….

Electrocardiography (TOF)

• Right axis deviation

• Right atrial and right ventricular enlargement

Chest x ray (TOF)

• Normal sized, boot shaped heart.

• Reduced pulmonary vascular marking (oligemic depend on the degree of RVOT obstruction.

Echocardiography (TOF)• Location and size of the VSD• The aortic override• The degree of RVOT obstruction• The size of pulmonary valve

annulus• Look for additional pulmonary

artery branch stenosis.• Look for other associated

anomalies Right aortic arch Coronary arteries anatomic

variations

Cardiac catheterization and Angiography

Hemodynanmic

Anatomical information

Therapeutic

Complications

Cardiovascular accidents : occurs in 4-5% of cases is due to cerebral embolism.

Brain abscess: rare in the first two years of life may be due to small cerebral infract which is super infected due to bacteraemia.

Infective endocarditisPolycythemia

ManagementMedical management:

A) Neonatal period if pulmonary flow is dependent of DA, give prostaglandin to prevent ductal closure and followed by palliative shunt (B-T Shunt)B)Recognition and treatment of hyper cyanotic spell.

Knee chest positioning of the patientAdministration of oxygen

Volume expansionCorrection of acidosis

Sedation with morphinePropranolol

C) Treat infective endocarditis D) Anaemia should be correctedE) Severe polycythemia correction with phlebotomy should be done.

Management

Surgical Management:A) Palliative: Modified Blalock-Taussig shunt

between pulmonary artery branch and subclavian artery

B) Corrective surgery : closing of the VSD and reliving all possible source of RVOT obstruction.

CompleteTranspostion of the Great Arteries

• The great arteries arise from morphologically wrong ventricles. (The aorta arise from the RV and Pulmonary arises from LV in the setting of a concordant atrioventricular connection.

Transposition of the Great Arteries

• TGA occurs in 8-9% of CHD

• Male are affected than Females

• Different variety exist

Hemodynamics

The RV pressure is systemicThe blood returning from the lung pass to the lung via PASystemic venous return passes back to the systemic circulation via the aorta.Both ventricles are volume overloaded.The right ventricle also pressure overloads and result in CHFSurvival depend on associated Large ASD, VSD,PDA.

Clinical features:Cyanosis detected 87% of the neonates immediately ; rest later at the age of 1 to 3 month and is progressive.ClubbingSquatting only 20% of patientsDyspnoeaCardiac failure Cough

Physical findings1)TGA with no VSDCyanosis intense Precordial liftLoud first soundSplitted S2Murmur may not be heard

Radiology (TGA)

• Increased pulmonary vascular marking

• Large heart with egg - on side appearance.

Electrocardiography (TGA)TGA with intact ventricular septum:• P wave tall• P upright T wave in lead V1 and V3R• Right ventricular hypertrophy• Right axis deviation

Echocardiography(TGA)

Shows the origion of :pulmonary artery from

the LVAorta from RV• Associated lesions like

VSD and ASD be identified.

• Coronary artery anatomy

Prognosis

• Patient die of anoxia and or CHF in the first 6 month of life if there is little communication.

ManagementMedical management:• Prostaglandin to keep the DA open until palliation

done• Give oxygen• Treat metabolic acidosis with bicarbonate.Surgical:• Palliative balloon septostomy creating /increasing

ASD Rashkind procedure.• Arterial Switch (Jaten Procedure)• Atrial switch ( Mustard procedure)